NAME

MsOffice::Word::HTML::Writer - Writing documents for MsWord in HTML format

SYNOPSIS

  use MsOffice::Word::HTML::Writer;
  my $doc = MsOffice::Word::HTML::Writer->new(
    title        => "My new doc",
    WordDocument => {View => 'Print'},
    charset      => "windows-1252",    # optional -- the default charset is utf-8
  );
  
  $doc->write("<p>hello, world</p>", 
              $doc->page_break, 
              "<p>hello from another page</p>");
  
  $doc->create_section(
    page => {size         => "21.0cm 29.7cm",
             margin       => "1.2cm 2.4cm 2.3cm 2.4cm",
             page_numbers => 50, # initial page number within this section
            },
    header => sprintf("Section 2, page %s of %s", 
                                  $doc->field('PAGE'), 
                                  $doc->field('NUMPAGES')),
    footer => sprintf("printed at %s", 
                                  $doc->field('PRINTDATE')),
    new_page => 1, # or 'always', or 'left', or 'right'
  );
  $doc->write("this is the second section, look at header/footer");
  
  $doc->attach("my_image.gif", $path_to_my_image);
  $doc->write("<img src='files/my_image.gif'>");
  
  my $filename = $doc->save_as("/path/to/some/file"); # or a filehandle

DESCRIPTION

Goal

The present module is one way to programatically generate documents targeted for Microsoft Word (MsWord). It doesn't need MsWord to be installed, and doesn't even require a Win32 machine (which is why the module is not in the Win32 namespace).

Note : another, more recent approach for doing the same task is the module MsOffice::Word::Template, which has the great advantage of generating documents in genuine .docx format, instead of the MHTML format explained below. So for new projects, consider using MsOffice::Word::Template instead of the present module.

MsWord and HTML

MsWord can read documents encoded in old native binary format, in Rich Text Format (RTF), in XML (either ODF or OOXML), or -- maybe this is less known -- in HTML, with some special markup for pagination and other MsWord-specific features. Such HTML documents are often in several parts, because attachments like images or headers/footers need to be in separate files; however, since it is more convenient to carry all data in a single file, MsWord also supports the "MHTML" format (or "MHT" for short), i.e. an encapsulation of a whole HTML tree into a single file encoded in MIME multipart format. This format can be generated interactively from MsWord by calling the "SaveAs" menu and choosing the .mht extension.

Documents saved with a .mht extension will not directly reopen in MsWord : when clicking on such documents, Windows chooses Microsoft Edge (in Internet Explorer mode) as the default display program. However, these documents can be simply renamed with a .doc extension, and will then open directly in MsWord. By the way, the same can be done with XML or RTF documents. That is to say, MsWord is able to recognize the internal format of a file, without any dependency on the filename. There is one unfortunate restriction, however : when the extension is .docx, MsWord does not accept any internal format different from OOXML. So one has to either stick with the .doc extension, or choose a specific extension like .mswhtml and then associate this extension to the MsWord program : to do so, type the following command in a windows console

  assoc .mswhtml=Word.Document.12 # for Office 2010, or .8 for Office 2003

Features of the module

MsOffice::Word::HTML::Writer helps you to programatically generate MsWord documents in MHT format. The advantage of this technique is that one can rely on standard HTML mechanisms for layout control, such as styles, tables, divs, etc. Of course this markup can be produced using your favorite HTML templating module; the added value of MsOffice::Word::HTML::Writer is to help building the MIME multipart file, and provide some abstractions for representing MsWord-specific features (headers, footers, fields, etc.).

Advantages of MHT format

The MHT format is probably the most convenient way for programmatic document generation, because

  • MsWord native binary format (used in versions up to 2003) was unpublished and therefore cannot be generated without the MsWord executable.

  • remote control of the MsWord program through an OLE connection, as in Win32::Word::Writer, requires a local installation of Microsoft Office, and is not well suited for server-side generation because the MsWord program might hang or might open dialog boxes that require user input.

  • generation of documents in RTF is possible, but authoring the models requires deep knowledge of the RTF structure --- see RTF::Writer.

  • authoring models in XML also requires deep knowledge of the XML structure.

    Instead of working directly at the XML level, one could use the OpenOffice::OODoc distribution on CPAN, which provides programmatic access to the "ODF" XML format used by OpenOffice. MsWord is able to read and produce such ODF files, but this is not fully satisfactory because in that mode many MsWord features are disabled or restricted.

    The XML format used by MsWord is called "OOXML". Modules Document::OOXML and MsOffice::Word::Surgeon on CPAN implement some operations on OOXML files, but have no support for creating a fresh document. The younger module MsOffice::Word::Template does provide an API for creating documents in OOXML format; the recommandation is to use that module instead of the present one.

MsOffice::Word::HTML::Writer allows you to produce documents even with little knowledge of MsWord. Besides, since the content is in HTML, it can be assembled with any HTML tool, and therefore also requires little knowledge of Perl.

One word of warning, however : opening MHT documents in MsWord is a bit slower than native binary or RTF documents, because MsWord needs to parse the HTML, compute the layout and convert it into its internal representation. Therefore MHT format is not recommended for very large documents.

Usage

MsOffice::Word::HTML::Writer is used in production at Geneva courts of law, for generating thousands of documents per day, from hundreds of models, with an architecture of reusable document parts implemented by Template Toolkit mechanisms (macros, blocks and views).

METHODS

General convention : method names that start with a verb may change the internal state of the writer object (for example "write", "create_section"); method names that are nouns return data without modifying the internal state (for example "field", "content", page_break).

new

    my $doc = MsOffice::Word::HTML::Writer->new(%params);

Creates a new writer object. Optional parameters are :

title

document title

any HTML declarations you may want to include in the head part of the generated document (for example inline CSS styles or links to attached stylesheets).

hf_head

any HTML declarations you may want to include in the head part of the headers and footers HTML document (MsWord requires headers and footers to be specified as divs in a separate HTML document).

WordDocument

a hashref of options to include as an XML island in the HTML head, corresponding to various options in the MsWord "Tools/Options" panel. These will be included in a XML element named <w:WordDocument>, and all children elements will be automatically prefixed by w:. The hashref may contain nested hashrefs, such as

  WordDocument => { View => 'Print',
                    Compatibility => {DoNotExpandShiftReturn => "",
                                      BreakWrappedTables     => ""} }

Names and values of options must be found from the Microsoft documentation, or from reverse engineering of HTML files generated by MsWord.

charset

an optional charset for MIME-encoding the document content. The default is utf-8. Another encoding like windows-1252 may be specified, but in principle this will not change the final result, since Word will decode the specified charset.

If the charset is different from utf-8, wide characters (those with values higher than 0xFF) will be replaced by their corresponding HTML numerical entities; so for example '♥' (\N{BLACK HEART SUIT}) will be replaced by &#9829;.

encode_fallback

a "fallback value" used as third argument to "encode" in Encode, when saving the file. This can be either a bitmask or a coderef, as documented in Encode. The default value is undef when the charset is utf-8. With other charsets, the default is the following "pass-through" coderef :

  sub {no utf8; sprintf "%c", shift}

This helps to support documents with mixed encoding (for example when passing utf8 data to a template with native characters). In such situations, native characters will be written "as is" to the final output, instead of being substituted with replacement characters. This behaviour can be disabled by passing an explicit undef as argument.

Parameters may also be passed as a hashref instead of a hash.

write

  $doc->write("<p>hello, world</p>");

Adds some HTML into the document body.

attach

  $doc->attach($localname, $filename);
  $doc->attach($localname, "<", \$content);
  $doc->attach($localname, "<&", $filehandle);

Adds an attachment into the document; the attachment will be encoded as a MIME part and will be accessible under files/$localname.

The remaining arguments to attach specify the source of the attachment; they are directly passed to "open" in perlfunc and therefore have the same API flexibility : you can specify a filename, a reference to a memory variable, a reference to another filehandle, etc.

create_section

  $doc->create_section(
    page => {size   => "21.0cm 29.7cm",
             margin => "1.2cm 2.4cm 2.3cm 2.4cm"},
    header => sprintf("Section 2, page %s of %s", 
                                  $doc->field('PAGE'), 
                                  $doc->field('NUMPAGES')),
    footer => sprintf("printed at %s", 
                                  $doc->field('PRINTDATE')),
    new_page => 1, # or 'always, or 'left', or 'right'
  );

Opens a new section within the document (or, if this is called before any "write", setups pagination parameters for the first section). Subsequent calls to the "write" method will add content to that section, until the next "create_section" call.

Pagination parameters are all optional and may be given either as a hash or as a hashref; accepted parameters are :

page

Hashref of CSS page styles, such as :

size

Paper size (for example 21cm 29.7cm)

margin

Margins (top right bottom left).

header_margin

Margin for header

Margin for footer

page_numbers

Initial value for page numbers within this section

paper_source

Parameters for paper source within this section (values for these parameters must be reverse engineered from MsWord HTML output)

Header content (in HTML)

first_header

Header content for the first page of that section.

Footer content (in HTML).

Footer content for the first page.

new_page

If true, a page break will be inserted before the new section. If the argument is the word 'left' or 'right', one or two page breaks will be inserted so that the next page is formatted as a left (right) page. If the argument is a numeric true value, it is translated into the word 'always', which tells MsWord to insert a page break in any case.

save_as

  $doc->save_as($target);

Generates the MIME document and saves it at the given $target, which can be a filename or a filehandle. If no extension is present in the filename, file extension .doc will be added by default; this is returned as the result from the method call.

content

Returns the whole MIME-encoded document as a single string; this is used internally by the "save_as" method. Direct call is useful if you don't want to save the document into a file, but want to do something else like embedding it in a message or a ZIP file, or returning it as an HTTP response.

page_break

  $doc->write($doc->page_break);

Returns HTML markup for encoding a page break within the same section. Another way of inserting a page break is to create a new section with an new_page parameter -- see "create_section".

tab

  my $html = $doc->tab($n_tabs);

Returns HTML markup for encoding one or several tabs. If $n_tab is omitted, it defaults to 1.

field

  my $html = $doc->field($fieldname, $args, $content,
                         $prevent_html_entity_encoding);

Returns HTML markup for a MsWord field.

Optional $args is a string with arguments or flags for the field. See MsWord help documentation for the list of field names and their associated arguments or flags.

Optional $content is the initial displayed content for the field (because unfortunately MsWord does not immediately compute the field content when opening the document; users will have to explicitly request to update all fields, by selecting the whole document and then hitting the F9 key).

Optional $prevent_html_entity_encoding is a boolean that prevents the automatic translation of <, > and & characters into HTML entities &lt, &gt and &amp;. This is useful if you want to insert some rich text.

Here are some examples :

  my $header = sprintf "%s of %s", $doc->field('PAGE'), 
                                   $doc->field('NUMPAGES');
  my $footer = sprintf "created at %s, printed at %s", 
                 doc->field(CREATEDATE => '\\@ "d MM yyyy"'),
                 doc->field(PRINTDATE  => '\\@ "dddd d MMMM yyyy" \\* Upper');
  my $quoted = $doc->field('QUOTE', '"hello, world"', 'hello, world');

quote

  my $html = $doc->quote($text, $prevent_html_entity_encoding);

Shortcut to produce a QUOTE field (see last field example just above).

The optional $prevent_html_entity_encoding argument is explained in the "field" method.

AUTHORING MHT DOCUMENTS

HTML for MsWord

MsWord does not support the full HTML and CSS standard, so authoring MHT documents requires some trial and error. Basic divs, spans, paragraphs and tables, are reasonably supported, together with their common CSS properties; but fancier features like floats, absolute positioning, etc. may yield some surprises.

To specify widths and heights, you will get better results by using CSS properties rather than attributes of the HTML table model.

In case of difficulties for implementing specific features, try to see what MsWord does with that feature when saving a document in HTML format (plain HTM, not MHT!). The generated HTML is quite verbose, but after eliminating unnecessary tags one can sometimes figure out which are the key tags (they start with o: or w:) or the key attributes (they start with mso-) which correspond to the desired functionality.

Collaboration with the Template Toolkit

The Template Toolkit (TT for short) is a very helpful tool for generating the HTML. Below are some hints about collaboration between the two modules.

Client code calls both TT and Word::HTML::Writer

The first mode is to use the Template Toolkit for generating various document parts, and then assemble them into MsOffice::Word::HTML::Writer.

  use Template;
  my $tmpl_app = Template->new(%options);
  $tmpl_app->process("doctmpl/html_head.tt", \%data, \my $html_head);
  $tmpl_app->process("doctmpl/body.tt",      \%data, \my $body);
  $tmpl_app->process("doctmpl/header.tt",    \%data, \my $header);
  $tmpl_app->process("doctmpl/footer.tt",    \%data, \my $footer);
  
  use MsOffice::Word::HTML::Writer;
  my $doc = MsOffice::Word::HTML::Writer->new(
    title  => $data{title},
    head   => $html_head,
  );
  $doc->create_section(
    header => $header,
    footer => $footer,
  );
  $doc->write($body);
  $doc->save_as("/path/to/some/file");

This architecture is straightforward, but various document parts are split into several templates, which might be inconvenient when maintaining a large body of document templates.

HTML parts as blocks in a single template

Document parts might also be encoded as blocks within one single template :

  [% BLOCK html_head %]
  <style>...CSS...</style>
  [% END; # BLOCK html_head %]
  
  [% BLOCK body %]
    Hello, world
  [% END; # BLOCK body %]
  
  etc.

Then the client code calls each block in turn to gather the various parts :

  use Template::Context;
  my $tmpl_ctxt = Template::Context->new(%options);
  my $tmpl      = $tmpl_ctxt->template("doctmpl/all_blocks.tt");
  my $html_head = $tmpl_ctxt->process($tmpl->blocks->{html_head}, \%data);
  my $body      = $tmpl_ctxt->process($tmpl->blocks->{body},      \%data);
  my $header    = $tmpl_ctxt->process($tmpl->blocks->{header},    \%data);
  my $footer    = $tmpl_ctxt->process($tmpl->blocks->{footer},    \%data);
  
  # assemble into MsOffice::Word::HTML::Writer, same as before

Template toolkit calls MsOffice::Word::HTML::Writer

Now let's look at a different architecture: the client code calls the Template toolkit, which in turn calls MsOffice::Word::HTML::Writer.

The most common way to call modules from TT is to use a TT plugin; but since there is currently no TT plugin for MsOffice::Word::HTML::Writer, we will just tell TT that templates can load regular Perl modules, by turning on the LOAD_PERL option.

The client code looks like any other TT application; but the output of the process method is a fully-fledged MHT document, instead of plain HTML.

  use Template;
  my $tmpl_app = Template->new(LOAD_PERL => 1, %other_options);
  $tmpl_app->process("doc_template.tt", \%data, \my $msword_doc);

Within doc_template.tt, we have

  [% # main entry point
  
     # gather various parts
     SET html_head = PROCESS html_head;
     SET header    = PROCESS header;
     SET footer    = PROCESS footer;
     SET body      = PROCESS body;
  
     # create Word::HTML::Writer object
     USE msword = MsOffice.Word.HTML.Writer(head=html_head);
  
     # setup section format
     CALL msword.create_section(
        page => {size          => "21.0cm 29.7cm",
                 margin        => "1cm 2.5cm 1cm 2.5cm",
                 header_margin => "1cm",
                 footer_margin => "0cm",},
        header => header,
        footer => footer
      );
  
      # write the body
     CALL msword.write(body);
  
     # return the MIME-encoded MsWord document
     msword.content();  %]
  
  [% BLOCK html_head %]
  ...

Inheritance through TT views

The above architecture can be refined one step further, by using TT views to encapsulate documents. Views have an inheritance mechanism, so it becomes possible to define families of document templates, that inherit properties or methods from common ancestors. Let us start with generic_letter.tt2, a generic letter template :

  [% VIEW generic_letter
        title="Generic letter template";
  
       BLOCK main;
         USE msword = MsOffice.Word.HTML.Writer(
            title => view.title,
            head  => view.html_head(),
         );
         view.write_body();
         msword.content();
       END; # BLOCK main
    
       BLOCK write_body;
         CALL msword.create_section(
            page   => {size          => "21.0cm 29.7cm",
                       margin        => "1cm 2.5cm 1cm 2.5cm"},
            header => view.header(),
            footer => view.footer()
         );
         CALL msword.write(view.body());
       END; # BLOCK write_body
    
       BLOCK body;
         view.letter_head();
         view.letter_body();
       END; # BLOCK body
    
       BLOCK letter_body; %]
        Generic letter body; please override BLOCK letter_body in subviews
    [% END; # BLOCK letter_body;
  
       # ... other blocks for header, footer, letter_head, etc.
  
     END; # VIEW generic_letter
  
  [% # call main() method if this templated was loaded directly
     letter.main() UNLESS component.caller %]

This is quite similar to an object-oriented class : assignments within the view are like object attributes (i.e. the title variable), and blocks within the view are like methods.

After the end of the view, we call the main method, but only if that view was called directly from client code. If the view is inherited, as displayed below, then the call to main will be from the subview.

Now we can define a specific letter template that inherits from the generic letter and overrides the letter_body block :

  [% PROCESS generic_letter.tt2; # loads the parent view
  
     VIEW advertisement;
  
       BLOCK letter_body; %]
  
         <p>Dear [% receiver.name %],</p>
         <p>You have won a wonderful [% article %].
            Just call us at [% sender.phone %].</p>
         <p>Best regards,</p>
         [% view.signature(name => sender.name ) %]
  
  [%   END; # BLOCK letter_body
     END; # VIEW advertisement
  
     advertisement.main() UNLESS component.caller %]

TO DO

  - link same header/footers across several sections
  - multiple columns
  - watermarks (I tried hard to reverse engineer MsWord behaviour,
    but it still doesn't work ... couldn't figure out all details
    of VML markup)

Contributions welcome!

AUTHOR

Laurent Dami, <dami AT cpan DOT org>

BUGS

Please report any bugs or feature requests to https://github.com/damil/MsOffice-Word-HTML-Writer/issues.

SEE ALSO

Win32::Word::Writer, RTF::Writer, Spreadsheet::WriteExcel, OpenOffice::OODoc, Document::OOXML, MsOffice::Word::Surgeon, MsOffice::Word::Template.

COPYRIGHT & LICENSE

Copyright 2009-2023 Laurent Dami, all rights reserved.

This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.